MSF, Doctors Without Borders, Ebola, response in the DRC
Ebola disease outbreak in the DRC and Uganda

Ebola outbreak in eastern DRC intensifies as MSF strengthens treatment and containment efforts

Key Takeaways

  • The Ebola disease outbreak due to the Bundibugyo virus – which does not yet have approved vaccines or specific treatments – is posing a major additional challenge.
  • As of 28 May, 125 confirmed cases, 906 suspected cases, and 223 deaths have been officially reported across Ituri, North Kivu, and South Kivu provinces.
  • Doctors Without Borders (MSF) teams are working to contain the spread of the disease and strengthen patient care, alongside the Ministry of Health.
  • As cases continue to rise, and with the response still ramping up, the coming weeks will be critical for strengthening care capacity, accelerating testing, and maintaining access to essential healthcare in affected areas.

Overview

In eastern DRC, people have been living through insecurity and with an under-resourced health system for years. The Ebola disease outbreak due to the Bundibugyo virus – which does not yet have approved vaccines or specific treatments – is posing a major additional challenge.

Doctors Without Borders (MSF) teams are working to contain the spread of the disease and strengthen patient care, alongside the Ministry of Health.
As of 28 May, 125 confirmed cases, 906 suspected cases, and 223 deaths have been officially reported across Ituri, North Kivu, and South Kivu provinces.

However, the true scale of the outbreak remains impossible to measure. Extremely limited testing capacity and difficulties in accessing certain areas mean that figures must be interpreted with caution.

Ituri, the epicentre of the outbreak, accounts for more than 90 per cent of the suspected cases that have been reported. The number of cases is increasing in Mongbwalu and Rwampara health zones.
 

Video

Ebola Disease Outbreak in the DRC

Unlike most previous Ebola disease outbreaks that occurred in the DRC, the current outbreak is due to a specific virus: the Bundibugyo virus.  Responding to this virus is particularly challenging as there are currently no approved vaccines or treatments available, unlike for the more common Ebola virus. Diagnosis is another major challenge as there is a shortage of Bundibugyo virus–specific test kits. 
MSF

Why this outbreak is particularly challenging

“We are working in a particularly difficult context,” says Dr Alan Gonzalez, MSF deputy director of operations. “For the past two weeks, our ability to get supplies and teams into the affected areas has been hampered by air and land travel restrictions. Testing capacity remains insufficient, and hundreds of samples are still awaiting processing in laboratories. Isolation and care capacity are also insufficient. All of this is impeding the rapid scale-up of the response and creating legitimate anxieties and fears among communities.”

Only a limited number of specialised organisations - including MSF - are currently responding in Ituri, and people’s needs far outweigh the available capacity.

MSF response in Ituri

In Ituri, MSF teams have begun constructing a 65-bed Ebola treatment centre (ETC) to admit both confirmed and suspected cases. We are also supporting the Ministry of Health in caring for and isolating people who are suspected cases at the Mongbwalu General Referral hospital, as well as at the Fataki General Referral hospital.

In Bunia, the capital of Ituri, MSF has set up an isolation system for patients in Salama hospital, and we are supporting several health facilities in and around the city to strengthen the safe treatment of suspected and confirmed cases. Teams are also reinforcing infection prevention and control measures. This is critical for preventing hospital-acquired infections, especially at a time when health services are under intense pressure.

At the same time, medical, logistics, and health promotion teams are supporting epidemiological surveillance and community awareness activities. This close collaboration with communities is crucial because, in many areas, concerns, fear, and the spread of rumours are complicating response efforts and can delay people from seeking timely care.
 

MSF, Doctors Without Borders, Ebola outbreak in DRC
Training activities at the General Referral Hospital at Mongbwalu, where MSF is currently using school buildings on the hospital grounds to train staff as part of the Ebola response.
Anna SCHÖNHOFER/MSF

Impact on access to healthcare

Beyond the Ebola outbreak itself, MSF teams are seeing how the outbreak is complicating people’s access to healthcare. In several areas, patients with other medical conditions are no longer seeking care at health facilities out of fear of Ebola or isolation measures. This raises concerns about a silent escalation of other health emergencies.

MSF response in North Kivu

In North Kivu, the response is being organised around systems that were already established following epidemics that have affected the province in recent years, including Ebola disease, Mpox, and cholera. In Goma, an 80-bed ETC has been set up, and the first patients have been admitted. Isolation units have also been set up for people who are suspected to have the disease in several health facilities supported by MSF, including in Walikale, Mweso and Rutshuru, and at Kyeshero hospital. In Butembo, MSF has sent a medical-logistics team to assess people’s needs and identify areas for response, in collaboration with the Ministry of Health.
 

This outbreak is affecting regions already severely weakened by years of ongoing conflict and massive displacement. Ewald Stals, MSF’s representative in DRC.
MSF, Doctors Without Borders, Ebola, response in the DRC
MSF staff are being trained at Brussels HQ prior their deployment on Ebola disease-related contexts. 
Pierre Fromentin (MSF)/MSF

MSF response in North Kivu

In North Kivu, the response is being organised around systems that were already established following epidemics that have affected the province in recent years, including Ebola disease, Mpox, and cholera. In Goma, an 80-bed ETC has been set up, and the first patients have been admitted. Isolation units have also been set up for people who are suspected to have the disease in several health facilities supported by MSF, including in Walikale, Mweso and Rutshuru, and at Kyeshero hospital. In Butembo, MSF has sent a medical-logistics team to assess people’s needs and identify areas for response, in collaboration with the Ministry of Health.

MSF Response in South Kivu

In South Kivu, where several cases have been confirmed, MSF teams have started setting up two ETCs in Bukavu and Lwiro. At the same time, we are training health workers in infection prevention and control measures in both cities.
An emergency medical response currently underway

“This outbreak is affecting regions already severely weakened by years of ongoing conflict and massive displacement,” explains Ewald Stals, MSF’s representative in DRC.

“In Ituri, as well as in North and South Kivu, insecurity has forced millions of people to flee their homes in search of safety. This constant movement is compounded by fragile and underfunded health systems,” says Stals. “In some health facilities, admission and isolation capacities are already reaching their limits. In this context, rapid case identification, contact tracing, and the isolation of sick people become particularly difficult, increasing the risk of further spread of the disease.”
 

MSF, Doctors Without Borders, Ebola outbreak in DRC
An MSF staff member carries construction materials during the setup of an isolation ward for people with suspected Ebola disease at Walikale General Hospital, North Kivu, DRC.
MSF

Response constraints and supply efforts

MSF is doing everything possible to support the response. Despite security and access constraints – including border closures and flight cancellations – MSF teams are working tirelessly to ensure that vital supplies continue to arrive in affected areas. Several hundred tons of medical and logistics supplies have already been delivered to Ituri and North Kivu.

What comes next

As cases continue to rise, and with the response still ramping up, the coming weeks will be critical for strengthening care capacity, accelerating testing, and maintaining access to essential healthcare in affected areas.

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